The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 200, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 21, 1941 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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FOUR
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
The El Reno Daily Tribune II
* B,ue Kibbon Newspaper Serving a Blue Ribbon Community «
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
fcnd entered as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
BUDGE HARLE DEAN WARD
News Editor Advertising Manager
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled to the use of re-
publication of all the news dispatches credited to it or not credited by
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER __ MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER OKLAHOMA PRESS
PUBLISHERS ASS N. ASSOCIATION
10 HID SAFETY
Dollar-a-Year Men Will
Do Field Work
LATIN-AMERICAN CONGA LINE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1941 ,
V. //'%
Three Months ---------------$1.75 Six Months..................$3.00
One Year--------------------$7.00 One Year____________________$5.00
Including Sales Tax
__TUFSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1941
YOU CANT READ OBSCENE NOVELS AND HAVE A (LEAN
HEART: Create in me a dean heart, O God.—Psalm 51:10.
The Voice of Highway Safety
Notes from Oklahoma Patrolmen’s
Big Brown Books
CHICAGO. Oct. 21 — (U.R)—'The
Federal government, fearful lest,
the defense program be retarded
by mounting Industrial accidents, |
is taking the field against this j
enemy of production.
During 1940, industrial accidents,
killed 17,000 workers, crippled 93,- j
000. put 1,250,000 out of produc-1
Ion for an average of 20 days j
/JKLAHOMA CITY. Oct 21 —; persons by Oklahoma patrolmen
(Special)—Though indications during September,
are that the national guard, ordina-1 * * *
rily the state's protective unit, will1 An Altus pedestrian was injured
be away from Oklahoma in federal seriously when he was struck by an
service for at least several more automobile while crossing an Okla-
months. the state will not be with- homa City street in the middle of
out trained protection. Walter B the block recently.
Johnson, commissioner of the de- * * *
partment of public safety, said to- Thirty-five dollars and costs was
day in commenting on the special the fine assessed a Tulsa motorist
instruction that is being given to | who was arrested by a patrolman for
• those attending the Oklahoma patrol drunken driving the other day. One
training school at Stringtown sub- ,’ou|' after he paid the fine he was
prison. arrested again on the same charge.
Besides the regular courses in ac- J * * *
rident investigation, first nid. law Pbl‘ C*^PS °f Snpiilpu and Britton
mechanics of firearms and the simi- ',l11 Planning special celebrations on
lar subjects which regularly are a 1 lbe °*Je,1*nB of tbp new white wavs
part of a patrolman's training, nil lat each town ls completing,
of the men are receiving special;
work in prison guard training un- I L»i|CP rivoo I
der the direction of Fred Hunt, | 1 xWlvl.S l 1 |J
warden at McAlester. L. C. Schid-J WjlwIlinoLm I
ler, warden of the federal reforma- tt <1. llllll^HHI JJI1K
tory at El Reno, and Lieutenant ---
Bendler of the federal prison bureau. CANONSBURG, Pa., Oct. 21—(U.R)
_ I —MnfpHnle ftvsrr* Ul.t__
DAILY 8UBSCRHTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
BY CARRIER ADJOINING COUNTIES Q(
One Week ....................$ .15 Three Months _______________$1.50 „
I'llMa Xf AwTUn rem m 11 .. _ - ^ --- --- — v- — -r- v -
each, according to government fig-
ures. Time lost, was enough to!
build 45 battleships or 15.000 heavy j
bombers.
The toll is expected to be greater 1
in 1941. |
Head of a force assigned to “get" 1
this foe ls husky V. A. Zimmer,!
Washington, director of the Com- J
mittee for the Conservation of'
Manpower in Defense Industries.
Accidents Up 78 Percent
Zimmer, in Chicago to meet
with the committee's field and
state directors in conjunction with
the national safety congress, said
that industrial accidents have
soared by 78 percent in some states
during the past few months, com-
pared with employment gains in
the same period ranging up to 25!
percent.
“The accident toll seriously ag-
gravates the skilled labor short-
age, which already has become a
graver menace than the raw mate- I
rials shortage.” Zimmer said.
The serious view which the gov-!
ernment takes of the situation was
emphasized by the presence of |
Secretary of Navy Frank Knox at
the safety congress banquet. Knox's
address urging reduction of acci-
dents was broadcast nationally.
Marshaled against the rising
tide of accidents Is the commit-
tee's force of 400 $l-a-year field
experts and 30 paid employes.
These men visit all plants with1
defense contracts or sub-contracts.
Their duties are to educate em-
ployers and laborers In accident
prevention and to obtain coopera-
tion in raising safety and health
standards.
“Blacklisting” Power Held
Employers who do not cooperate
may find themselves without de-
fense contracts, Zimmer hinted.
He said his committee has power
to recommend "blacklisting" by
the department of labor of firms
not meeting minimum health and
safety requirements. However, he
added that "90 percent" of em-
ployers were cooperating.
Another big gun was fired in the
anti-accident campaign with the
opening in October of safety en-
gineering courses in 57 engineer-
ing colleges. Fostered by Zimmer's
committee and financed by the
<
_
‘■'sat
[VENT IS SET
—
150,000 Persons To Seei
National Contest
• STORIES
IN STAMPS
Schoolmaster Became
President of Argentina
V*
TONICA, 111., Oct. 21—fU.R)—More
than 150,000 persons will tramp j
over the Theodore Schaefer farm
j near here Nov. 3 expecting to see1
j a new record set In the national j
| corn husking contest—top sport-
I ing event of the year for farmers
I from 11 midwestern states.
Competition is expected to be!
the keenest in corn husking his-1 ARGENTINIANS point with
tory as state winners and runners-1 _ Pride to Domingo Faustino
up battle to smash an all-time
record established in 1940 at Dav-
enport, Iowa, when Irvin Bauman
of Eureka, 111., husked 46.71 bushels
of corn in 80 minutes.
The national event will follow
by three days the Illinois state
contest which also will be held on
the Schaefer farm.
Contest officials have added
Sarmiento, known in history as
the “Schoolmaster President,” an
outstanding exception to the axiom
that schoolteaching and national
politics don’t mix.
Sarmiento, honored philateli-
eally by Argentina in the 1888
stamp, above, ranks high in his
nation’s list of benefactors. He
followed the great President Mitre
—«•—*» nave aautn as head of the government and
parades, farm equipment exhibi- wisely advanced economic and ed-
tions and band concerts to the ucational affairs of the nation,
program in hope of making the Born in 181he was forced
two contests a four-day carnival.
Eleven States Entered
States which will be represented
in the national event include Il-
linois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas,
into exile during the reign of Juan
Manuel de Rosas. Sarmiento spent
most of his exiled years in Chile,
where he founded the first Chile-
an normal school. He later trav-
eled in the United States and Eu-
Cicu III uic yj IIIIVU oiaita aisu xjua
Wisconsin, Ohio. Pennsylvania and rope studying educational meth
In addition. J. Fdgnr Hoover, di- fl / °m th(* 1,ls,orle old
elm- Of Hi/. feHerni human nf in. ! 08 house of David Reed—scene of
proceedings In a land dispute in-
rector of the federal bureau of in
vestlgatlon, has assigned several F
volving George Washington—have
B I. specialists to teach the spe- 1 u_on <rlnn,.........
cial subjects that have been deemed bullt , J “ m '“^"lirs" aT
a necessary part of the training ln'Zeman Mrs' A L
^er«0encTP0“,bUUy * “ *»«• Purclused the Reed
* y house in Mount Pleasant township
Wlille D A. Bryce, international recently and transferred some of
expert in pistol shooting nnd use of the contents to their new home
all firearms, has conducted the nearby Maplevlew.
firearms Training at previous schools.! The old home was the scene of
Don Parsons, government laboratory j a meeting In 1784, uttended by
specialist, is here for the first time. Washington, and a group of "squat -
He is teaching the cadets how to ,ers" who insisted they had rights
• BEHIND THE SCENES
IN WASHINGTON
^■■■■»*■■■■mmm+m>
Uncle Samuel Dusts Off the Doctor Books
In Effort to Save Delicate Nephews for Army
While Peter Edson vacations this column will carry articles by
NF.A Service writers and other contributors.
open packages suspected of con-: to s°me property which Washlng-
taining bombs and other destructive ton bad obtained from Iriquois In-
agencies, as well as all other in-1 dinns of the Six Nations group. -------------- — ----------- ——
formation pertaining to sabotage 1 Washington's claim was to 2,813 Iofficp °T Education, these courses
W. O. Banister, special agent in! aFr“, ,and "west of the An‘" “H.T" T °"!y C0Ue“_e ,8tu‘
charge of the Oklahoma City F B I , es' The w>ttlprs disputed the
I. office, and his assistant. Ralph “ ?" ground* the dppd
Hood, will conduct classes in esplon- I Ind TT! stand up 1,1
age. including elen.enta.-y instruc- ^ ' , h?‘r „8ett ln* 0,1
tion in code deciphering. ! ^ » „lhelr deveMopmont
, * 1 of It constituted reasons for per-
Johnson concluded by expressing manent possession,
his plcas.irc that the various gov-1 The Revolutionary leader, five
ernmental protective agencies, real- years later to become "the father
Ring the. value of the school, hnve of his country," refused to give
co-operated to such n marked dp- ground, nnd the Washington coun-
gree, and also that the 40 trainees ty court upheld his right to the
are showing marked aptitude for tract and that decision was up-
held by the supreme court follow-
ing a subsequent, appeal by the
group of settlers
the training they arc receiving.
s'* * *
An Oklahoma City motorist, en-
route to the office of the depnrt- i
ment of public safety to make an
accident report, had his second nc- j
.Idem of the da\ on U.e wav and
climaxed his bnd luck by being nr-1 ran b<‘ huppy ,hal Holdlprs not
rested for reckless driving when he1 plcnlckm- haVP bPP» using their
finally arrived at the .safety head- proper‘y The N,‘w °rlenn!i C|Unr-
qunrters. termaster de|>ot estimates the
* * , troops left behind them at least
, .. . 10,000.000 Un cans — nil of them
first nid was administered to 289 burled.
ARMY BURIES TIN CANS
NEW ORLEANS (U.R)—Residents
of the ixmlsinna maneuvers area
ran be huppy that soldiers, not
( DOWN MEMORY LANE
dents but to qualified supervisory
employes In Industry.
Small Plants Hurd Hit
Tlie Industrial accident strikes
hardest In small plants where, ac-
cording to Zimmer, the simple
safety rules are unknown or un-
observed In many cases. He re-
called a small Texas clothing firm
which had what it called a "safety
program” — consisting of a pair of
scissors, n roll of gauze and a bot-
tle of Iodine.
Tin* committee's field represen-
tatives are Intensifying their cam-
paign in such Industries. They use
no new techniques. Zimmer em-
phasized. They simply are plugging
away at educating management
nnd labor in time-tried methods
of accident prevention.
Zimmer listed the principal
causes of the accident increase as:
Greater number of untrained
workers In industry; lack of suffi-
cient safety instruction; increased
tempo of production; crowded con-
ditions in plants taking on more
men to fill defense orders, and
longer hours, which result In fa-
11 lgue and carelessness.
Oct, 21 1 «i:i 1 ! ■—"
A. Francis Portn. county attorney of Canadian county * PROBLEM A DAY
was Kuest speaker at the El Reno hinhschool Wednesday
rnornlnjr. I he program was arranged by the science de-
partment to honor the late Thomas A. Edison. John Macv.
student council president, introduced the speakers, who in
addition to Mr. Porta were Robert Evans, who gave a brief
biography of Edison; Leon Martin, who drew a compari-
son of different types of light; Rosemary Parks, who dis-
cussed inventions; and Helen Sheets, who offered a eulogy.
ruinm'!' (>,imp and French Laughlin of
Calumet ami L. T. Samuelson of El Reno went to Oklahoma
City today to confer with the state highway commission
on proposals to pave U. S. highway through Calumet
and Geary.
A town has a population of 52,000
and grows at an average rate of
1200 Inhabitants a year. How long
will It be before its population will
cqunl that of a town at present
having 73,000 inhabitants and an
average annual Increase of 500?
Answer
30 years. Explanation — The
smaller town gains 700 inhabitants
on the larger town each year. Sub-
tract 52.000 from 73,000; divide 21 -
000 by 700.
BY MILTON BUONNER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
H/ASH1NUTON. Thoroughly
alarmed by the frightening
fact that almost 50 per cent of the
men called for Army service have
been physically or mentally unlit,
the government has begun a
nation-wide rehabilitation pro-
gram.
At a recent press conference,
President Roosevelt revealed only
the Army’s direct part In the pro-
gram. Brig. Gen. Lewis B Her-
shey told him nearly 1,000,000
men had been rejected, but it
was estimated 200,000 of these
could be cured of their disabili-
ties and then taken into camp.
These will be retained under or-
ders of the local selective service
boards and will be visited by
traveling teams of specialists.
Where they decide a man’s ail-
ments are quickly remediable, he
will be given care by local doc-
tors and dentists at the govern-
ment’s expense.
(JNE purt of the rehabilitation
program will be in charge of
Paul V. McNutt, administrator of
the Federal Security Agency, who,
among many other duties, presides
over health welfare and related
activities. When he revealed llg*
uies on rejections by the Army,
defects and the percentages were
as follows: bad teeth, 20.9; bad
eyes, 13.7; heart and artery dis-
eases, 10.6; venereal diseases, (i.3;
musculo-skeletal defects, 6 8; men-
tal and nervous defects, 6.3; her-
nia, 6.2; car defects, 4.6; bnd feet,
4.0; lung troubles, 2.9; all other
causes, 17.7.
Shortly afler he studied these
figures, McNutt appointed a com-
mission of seven physicians and
surgeons to examine the facts and
to make recommendations. About
six weeks ago they reported to
him, urging among other things
that hereafter if men are clussi-
Private Scores
Without AB(s
DENVER, Oct. 21 - (U.P> Private
tied as unfit for military duty a
(Tommy Erases
Kipling’s Lines
BOURNEMOUTH. England, Oct.
21—IU.Ri — Protests throughout Brit-
ain have moved the Southern Com-
mand of the army to relent fol-
lowing an earlier ban on officers’
dancing In the ballroom of Bourne-
mouth pavilion.
Reason for the ban was that
South Dakota.
Each state will send its two top
huskers. Defending champions are
not entered automatically but
must win their way through state
contests each year to enter the
national.
Central figure in pre-contest
ods.
He returned to Argentina after
the masses had overthrown de
Rosas and formed the Argentine
Republic in 1853. Sarmiento ed-
ited a newspaper upon his return
and served as superintendent of
schools.
His public service record in-
cludes a period as diplomatic rep-
planning is the man on whose I,a
wm
_ . 8 ' , San Juan province, envoy to the
Schaefer says he is not worried | united States from 1805 U> 1868,
about the grass his guests will and then president i
trample, the thousands of hot dogs, - --
they will eat or where they will; .
park their automobiles. Those prob- LOUIS Bromtiekl Heads
Farmer-Labor Co-0]
over to:
lems have been handed
responsible committees.
Nevertheless, the prospect of a
visit by 150.000 persons intrigues
Schaefer and his two sons
MANSFIELD. Ohio. Oct. 21— (U
Headed bv Louis Bromfleld. tl
1,“ ncici axiu ms IWU SUI1S.
Important as the actual contest author-farmer, representatives
distinction should be made if the 1» HPas0” for the ban was tha
defects ore remediable. j frequently officers, n. c. o. s nnd pri-
When this is the case, they said vates had 10 sharp thp same table
the letter “R” should be placed ! '‘and il was obviously undesirable
after the man's classification in- that thPse conditions should be al-
dex. Also in the printed forms lowed to continue.” Obviously, it
for reports by doctors for the local was' except for the sensible people
draft boards, space should be left 1 who remarked, “quite right, too!”
for the examining doctors to state and turned over In their sleep. The
whether in their opinion defects! measure had a surprising recep-
were remediable or correctable, tion. The army command was in-
Thesc things would serve as guides formed briefly, but pointedly, from
to authorities in Washington. ! every corner of the country that
In cases where the men were! lfs name was mud
deemed not easily cureable, the! .
doctors recommended that a space' An expert on etl,luettp was call-
should be left in the reports for i ed ln t0 pxPlaln further that re-
rejected men to state whether: liablp lnf°rmatlon had been re-
they were willing to undergo celved to the effect that after a
treatment to alleviate their de- Paul Jones- there was a grave risk
fects. whether they were able to I that officers' partners might have
pay for such treatment. The com- | to return to the same table as pri-
mission recognized that many men ' vates’ partners, and thus would
probably could not afford to pay meet.
for surgical or dental care and j The Bournemouth corporation
therefore they suggested that fed- felt .lighted, and men have been
eral financial aid might be neces-; toU1 that they can dance Monday
to Thursday with the officers.
A wartime investigation ap-
parently has shown that these are
the less crowded evenings. On busy
nights—Friday and Saturday—of-
ficers still are banned. Neverthe-
less. the commander seems to know
that the pavilion is efficiently
managed, and said so In this letter
to the town clerk:
’The army commander made It
plans are the food and housing
problems with which Tonica citi-
zens and householders are now
wrestling.
Huge Catering Job
Officials say that 800 persons
will be needed to serve food during; —~ —.......- ..........
the four-day event. Community cl,v workers can get together, “
larders are already being stocked better 11 wil1 be ror “n of us
with sufficient provisions. "Suffi-!Bromfleld sald. pointing out til
-------- •• for tlu, eyent | surplus foodstuffs going to wasi
farm, labor and cooperative organ
izations met near here to form
Farmer-Labor Cooperative counc
for northern Ohio, to combat tti
rising cost of living.
"The sooner the farmers
on farms because of the outmodc
sary.
(JUT of the million young men
already rejected, the Presi-
dent plans for the Army to take
care of 200,000. McNutt will try
to work out a plan to take care
of most of the remaining 800,000
and the future rejects as the Army
calls up men for examination. But
many weeks will elapse before a
program is fully evolved.
J11 the first place, the local se-. _______- _________
Icctlve boards all over the country 1 clear that this action ln restrict-
will be asked to send to Washing- 1 ing the use of the ballroom was ln
ton fuller ftetuils about the re- no way a reflection on the man-
jected men. After these facts are agement of the Bournemouth pa-
collated. McNutt with physicians, . vlllon This he wants to emphasize
surgeons and dentists will outline M he knoWi thf p.v,u„n to be very
a b." or Congress with an est - 1 wrll conducU.d
mate of the expense of such a big
rehabilitation program. The cost ]
end of it will be submitted to th« Canadian Youth of 20
President and the Budget Bureau. a, u? ,, ion
If approved, a rehabilitation bill I VV ar "ond
carrying an appropriation will I
then go to the House Appropria- VANCOUVER, B C., Oct. 21—(UR)
tlons Committee. —Vancouver's star victory bond
‘ salesman ts a 20-yenr-old lad who
elded to use him ns nn experiment1 never sold anything before In his
clent provisions"
judging from last year's contest, J
means 1.075 pounds of coffee. 3 478 j--------- — ------------ ---- —
dozen buns, 3,413 pounds of hot-! not ePt them t0 the pit>' ( 0nsum'
dogs and 3 413 pounds of ham-i'n need ,bem'
burger. 1 The meeting was attended t
Many of the visitors will remain1 representatives of the Consumei
for the entire celebration. The in- j division in Ohio; the Clevelar
flux of guests ls expected to tax 1 Cooperutive committee; the Clevt
LaSalle county housing facilities latid Industrial council, and tl
and many of the visitors may be Northern Ohio Cooperatives ass<
lodged in private homes. I ciation.
Illinois state husking competl- J --
tion will be held on Oct. 31. from Mrs. C. C. Schmelzel and M. I
12:30 until 1:45 p. m. A motor [ Wilson, 511 South Choctaw avenu
caravan will tour LaSalle countv end Mrs. Bert Glerliart of Rato
the following day.
Outdoor religious devotions will
be conducted Sunday afternoon
on the Schaefer farm by Dr. John
W. Holland of Chicago, famed
pastor of "The Little Brown Church
of the Air.”
The national event on Nov. 3
will begin at noon.
N. M.. returned Saturday from
week's visit to points in Kansas at
Missouri. Enroute home they slo;
ped in Tulsa to visit Mr. and Mi
Edgar Wilson and family and M
and Mrs. Elton Wilson. Mrs. Schme
zel and Mrs. Gierhart are daughte
and Messrs. Wilson are sons of I
jN. Wilson.
"OTTOMAN EMPIRE"
nnd sfe if he would be able to
grasp the work by having his les-
sons reud to him.”
Captain William B Wherrett and
Sergeant Otto Lehmkuhl took the
Mrs. Vam Van Gundy was elected president, Mrs L
ones president and Mrs. S. A. Thompson secretary of!
the Red Rock home demonstration dub at its meeting
Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Mary Van Gundy and Mrs
Grace Van Gundy Members of the club also completed
1 .1 1 t? Halloween party for members and their hus-
bands m the Earl McCann home, according to Miss Harvev
I ltom|>Hon, county home demonstration agent,
t»Lr,Uy K,' R* C' W«ber* c G. Wattson, J. R
“nd W. R. Huckner attended a district Masonic
m^tiiitf Tuesday night in Minco.
• BARBS
Claud 8. Aston can t rend or write cowpoke Into hand. They read text
nllr Itff irradlintn/t mltb ImnnH, » , , , , ,
books to him and at examination
time read the questions and then
wrote down his answers.
They burned midnight oil, but
Private Aston learned his lessons
but he graduated with honors nt
the Army's medical technicians’
school at Fitzsimmons Oeneral
hospital,
Drafted last August, the 23- _
year-old Sayre, Okla, cowboy was; His grades soared until he headed
life. E. A Cleveland. Jr., took on
the salesmanship job after an In-
jured back forced him to give up
his training with the R. C. A. F
He rang up 183 sales totaling
$113,000
HORIZONTAL
1 depicted
, country.
1 6 Tia capital.
12 Fruit,
141 ared.
16 1-ert of "be.”
18 Provided.
19 Hostelry.
21 Musical note.
22 Parent.
23 Two fives.
25 Electrified
particle.
1 26 Money of
account.
I 28 Peri.
; 29 Boat paddle.
| 31 Completes.
| 33 Model.
31 Bones.
38 Astronomical
instrument.
39 Tear again.
40 Vegetable.
41 Poker stake.
42 Fiber knots.
44 Soft mineral,
46 Dance step,
48 Not high.
50 Compass
point.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
BSSfl
TniOIB
E
If!
A VBR'T
SE.LAH
• 1 rVf
_ nMeirn
Oljhonm Xlt.v ahortly after the accident. The older
itE'iant; Ur W mn r*,por,,'d u not •erioux hy hoapitnl
()UR idea of anyone marrytn»
^ for money it they’r* not worth
• • t
Voflonol Fire prevention Week,
Oct. 5 to II, reminds us that the
one and only ploce to keep the
home fires burning is in the
furnace.
• • •
Speaking of desperate straits,
Allied diplomat* fear a new criaia
III the Dardanelles.
• • •
People who think before they
speak usually can back up what
they say. Others just back up.
• e e
The greet mejorlty of us will
get no piece running things Into
the ground. Left leave that to
Uie farmers.
sent to Denver and enrolcd In
the 1111 dl( nl 1 l.i ,r>
Progress came slow to the lanky
cowhand until he raised up In
class one day and explained
"I can't read and write.
"You see. my mother died when
t was a tike, and I Just drifted
away from the school"
The Instructors rushed him to
Lieutenant-Colonel William W Me-
Caw, commandant of the school
which trains medical technicians
(or field hospitals.
"The young fellow was Just a*
smart as could be and wanted to
learn everything there wee to learn
In the school " colonel MrCaw
said.
"I was so Impressed with his
natural intelligence that we do-
the class of 236 enlisted men.
Came graduation time, the ser-
geant, the captain, the colonel and
the governor—who handed out the
diplomas-beamed with pride.
"He's a fine boy.” chuckled Col-
onel McCaw.
"One of the best." echoed Colo-
rado's Oovernor Ralph L. Carr.
After the graduation ceremonies
Private Aston was assigned to the
217111 Oeneral hospital ut flirt
Riley. Kan
Mrs. I N Frost of Raymondvllls,
Tex. Major and Mrs Prank L. Mil-
ler of Camp Barkeley, Tex., arrived
Sunday to send a week with Mrs.
Frost's and Mrs. Miller's parents,
Mr. and Mrs, J. A. DeAtley. 8(16
South Barker avenue.
• DAILY LESSON
IN ENGLISH
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say. "I shall tend to this ac-
count at once." Say. "I shall attend
to this account at once.”
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED Col-
ander. Pronounce kul-nn-der, u ns
In up, a as In an unstressed, e as In
her, accent first syllable.
OFTEN MI8PELLED: Professor;
one f, two e'a.
SYNONYMS: Caricature, burles-
que, parody, travesty,
WORD STUDY' "Use a word
three times nnd It Is yours." Let us
Increase our vocabulary by master-
Ing one word each day. Today's
word: ALLITERATION; repetition
of the same letter or sound at. the
beginning of words succeeding each
other, ns, "In a summer season
when soft was the sun."
51 Always
(poet.).
54 That thing.
55 Each (abbr.).
58 Roof flnial.
58 Sun god.
60 Pronoun.
61 Emmets.
63 Stack.
65 Commands.
66 Hardens.
VERTICAL
2 Opposite of
down.
3 Portuguese
coin.
4 Mohammedan
infidel.
5 Suffix.
7 Northeast
(abbr.),
8 Sea otter.
9 Constellation,
10 Railway
(abbr.),
11 Pillar.
13 Upon.
15 Simpleton.
17 Form of "1."
19 Within.
20 Negative.
22 Plural (abbr.)
24 Inhabitants 0!
Normandy.
27 Rues.
28 Perfume.
30 Ammonia
substance.
32 Pertaining
to dower.
33 Seize.
34 Mineral rock.
36 Perched.
37 Exist.
43 Dish.
45 Eagle's nest
46 Stud
47 By.
49 Plural
52 Typ
53 Ceri
55 Fim
67 Ital
59 Bev
Cl Lan
62 Sen
63 Pin
64 Clo
It
2
7-
4
5
12
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 200, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 21, 1941, newspaper, October 21, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919860/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.